mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone.
mopped his brow, exhaled sharply, and picked up his phone
A complete subject and predicate are more thorough than simple subjects and predicates. A complete subject includes the entire group of words discussing the subject, while the complete predicate consists of the words left in a sentence after the complete subject is removed.
"The Marine officer" is a phrase, not a sentence. A phrase does not necessarily have a predicate, and in thie case it does not. Suppose you were looking instead for the complete predicate of the follownig sentence: The Marine officer with shiny shoes drove the Chevrolet past the laundromat on Fifth Street. In that case, the complete predicate would start with the word "drove" and include the rest of the sentence to the end.
A word 'connected' to a verb could be a helping (auxiliary) verb, an adverb, a direct or an indirect object of the verb.You may be looking for the word predicate. The predicate is the verb and all the words that follow the verb that are related to that verb. The simple predicate is the verb; the complete predicate is the verb and the related words that follow it. A sentence may have more than one simple predicate or complete predicate.
"Complete" predicates have lots of details (adverbs, phrases) about the verb. Simple predicates have simply the verbExample: The dog ran down the street. Simple predicate: ranExample: The dog ran down the street. Complete predicate: ran down the street
If you are analyzing a sentence, then you are probably looking for the direct predicate, which is the verb only, no additional modifiers (this includes adverbs).
BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER. BY LOOKING UP IN THE COMPUTER.
because it knows about its power.... is animal
depends if your looking for a PS device or a regular computer if your looking for a computer 1 go on ANDKON.com
No. With the expression "to look forward," meaning to anticipate with pleasure, we use the progressive form of the verb in the predicate. Write "You are looking forward to your plans succeeding." Or "You are looking forward to your plans' success."
yes.
you
For most computer styles you can figure this out by looking in "My Computer"